Why are you so certain of this? — Banno
I put it to you that you also sometimes know how things are - not all the time, and sometimes you are indeed wrong, but sometimes, you get it right - which is to say, you occasionally speak the truth. I hope you will agree with me at least on this. — Banno
if you doubt their existence, then they should not stop you walking naked through the local shopping mall. Their gaze can be quite convincing. — Banno
dreaming of me — Banno
So really my question "against what coherently conceived directness would we be contrasting it" — Janus
We perceive the world via phenomenal experience. — hypericin
The world is first in the chain of events leading to phenomenal experience, and the experience is last. Therefore, we perceive the world indirectly. — hypericin
Perhaps this is the source of much of the disagreement. The debate is a factual one; about whether we do or do not perceive the world directly. The direct realist position is that we do perceive the world directly; the indirect realist position is that we do not. — Luke
My experience, of sight or of smell and so on, is an experience entirely created inside my head. The data for the experience comes from outside, but the experience is crafted inside. And that's why I don't agree with "we experience reality as it is ".
a billiard ball's path contains information about the cue ball that struck it — Count Timothy von Icarus
"Blue" is definitional, in terms of wavelengths — AmadeusD
How are we to know which parts of our experience provide us with “raw” information about the external world?
In fact the very claim that two people see the dress to be two different colours requires that colour words (in this context) refer to the quality of the experience and not the wavelength of the light as the wavelength is the same for all of us. — Michael
it’s important to recognise that the term “blue” now has two different meanings. — Michael
"Blue" is definitional, in terms of wavelengths and we ascertain an aberration from that definition. Not from disparate experiences themselves. — AmadeusD
The Direct Realist argues that just from knowing an effect it is possible to know its cause. Whether seeing a billiard ball at rest on a billiard table and directly knowing its prior state — RussellA
So it's not that you think we can never be certain; it's just that you think we can only be certain about some issues, not others. Good.Why are you so certain of this?
— Banno
Because logically these are the only possibilities. — hypericin
Well, yes, in that it cuts right across our discussion; we want to get it right. It does not matter if you know of an enemy attack directly or indirectly, if you know that it is truly occurring: provided you get it right.Knowing the truth, getting things right, is completely orthogonal to the discussion. — hypericin
Again, it is of little consequence whether your certainty is "absolute" or not, so long as you act as if....I only doubt it to the extent that I am not absolutely certain of their existence. If I somehow had direct access to their inner lives, I could be absolutely certain. — hypericin
What, then, of the senses? — Mww
Agreed on the first, but how does the second follow? — Mww
Consider that the human body does not produce any experience unless it is an extremely narrow environmental range; the enviornment is always essential to the processes that give rise to perception. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Thus, on sensory experience I'd tend to go with the relational-dispositional theories, that sensation of say "sky blue" requires both a disposition on the side of the experiencer, and a certain sort of environment. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But this is factually untrue. I can, just by imagining it, picture the color "sky blue", in any environment I might be in. This suggests that the sensation is mine, and I am just fine tuned so that the environment can appropriately stimulate it.
We perceive the world via phenomenal experience.
— hypericin
The world is first in the chain of events leading to phenomenal experience, and the experience is last. Therefore, we perceive the world indirectly.
— hypericin — Mww
My reasoning is, if the connection between the self and phenomenal experience is direct, and the world is several major casual steps prior to phenomenal experience, involving transitions between multiple domains (sensory input -> nervous signal, nervous signal -> phenomenal experience, to be very oversimplified), then the connection between the self and world must be indirect.
The question arises, what is the “self”? — NOS4A2
First, phenomenology distinguishes between imagined/pictured phenomena and sensory experience. This seems uncontroversial since we do not generally have trouble distinguishing our imaginings and reality, and indeed of we did much of philosophy would need to be reworked. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Realism is the concept in question, after all, its apparent dual nature, right? — Mww
Dunno why it should be that we perceive the world indirectly just because it’s first in a chain of events. — Mww
Even if all that’s fine, with respect to the direct/indirect dichotomy alone, how does that, or how does each of them, relate to realism? Realism is the concept in question, after all, its apparent dual nature, right? — Mww
Well, the first step is to
explain what it means to experience something directly and what it means to experience something indirectly. Can "direct" and "indirect" be explained without simply being defined as not being the other? — Michael
So let's take olfactory experience. Do I smell a rose? Or do I smell the geraniol in the air, produced by the oils in a rose's petals? Must it be a case of either/or, or are they just different ways of talking about the same thing? — Michael
After that, we should ask if there's such a thing as a correct smell. Perhaps the way a rose smells to me isn't the way a rose smells to you. If there is a difference, must it be that at least one of us is wrong? — Michael
This leads on to having to ask if, and in what way, smells are properties of roses. Do our noses enable us to experience a rose's "inherent" smell, or does a rose have a smell only because organisms have noses? — Michael
If the latter then we might then ask if there's a difference between smelling a rose and experiencing a smell caused by a rose. — Michael
And finally, is there something unique about visual experience such that noses and smells are fundamentally different (in the relevant philosophical sense) to eyes and e.g. colours. — Michael
The distinction is about mediation. Is the experience mediated, so that it arrives second hand, via a more direct experience? Or is there no intervening layer of experience? — hypericin
So an experience of an external world object is direct if and only if the atoms that constitute that object are physically touching the atoms in my brain that constitute my experience — Michael
I said nothing of the sort. — hypericin
See my example of the baseball game. — hypericin
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